Sentencing is still set for Monday, August 26th, at Redwood City, California courthouse, 9:00 AM. Victims will be reading their statements on the 26th and possibly the 27th ( as there are so many victims.)

Coffee and donuts will be available to victims, families and friends at 8:15 am on the second floor of the Redwood City courthouse in a conference room on August 26th.

Victims are urged to attend. At a hearing two weeks ago, when some victims spoke, Ayres couldn't look at them. He needs to hear from as many of his victims as possible.

Yesterday, william ayres was sentenced to 8 years for 8 counts of child molestation. He was sentenced 8 years for each of the counts, but the judge felt that it was fair that he be allowed to serve the terms "concurrently."

He has time served credit for 432 days, which includes 184 days he was at Napa State Hospital for treatment for "Alzheimer's related dementia" WHICH he could have avoided altogether by simply stating that he was FAKING symptoms, which is what the doctors and the court later found to be true anyway... PLUS it includes 32 days of credit from some kind of special calculation the purpose of which I don't know or care about.

He MUST serve 85% of the time, so time in prison is probably REALLY only about 5 and a half years.

It should be noted that while there were 8 counts, there about 50 known OUT of STATUTE victims who reported and were willing to testify, and it's likely that over the "psychiatrist's" very long career, there were HUNDREDS of victims.

Readers here know that the prosecutor on the Ayres case was so problematic towards his victims that complaints were filed against her to the California Bar. In March, 2013 she was disciplined by the Bar for lying to the victims, their families and prosecution witnesses.

On September 2, 2013, the Larry Elder radio show out of KABC in Los Angeles did a segment about the problematic prosecutor, Melissa Mckowan in the Ayres case.

The guest hosts for the Labor Day show were Leo Terrell and Robin Sax. Journalist Victoria Balfour, who brought the Ayres case to the San Mateo PD, was a guest on the show. You can hear the 10 minute segment here:

Robin Sax , one of the hosts, is a former prosecutor in Los Angeles and currently works as a legal analyst for the Today Show.

Sax actually has some prior experience with the Ayres case, as she wrote an article in the Huffington Post in 2009 about Balfour being barred from access to the courtroom in the first Ayres criminal trial.

Sax recounted on this week's radio show about how bizarrely, San Mateo DA Steve Wagstaffe tried to retaliate against her for writing the opinion piece by calling up her then- boss, Los Angeles District Attorney Steve Cooley to try to get her disciplined for speaking out about the matter.

Sax was not disciplined for her opinion piece.

Sax talks about how odd it was that Wagstaffe would try to retaliate against her.

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